System and Method for Multi-Wavelength Encoding

ABSTRACT

In one embodiment, a method for multi-wavelength encoding includes receiving an input optical packet stream having an address and data and encoding the address of the input optical packet stream producing an encoded address including a first group of symbols including a first selected symbol, where the first group of symbols has more than two symbols. The method also includes generating a first wavelength in accordance with the first selected symbol and generating an output optical packet stream having the data of the input optical packet and the first wavelength, where the first wavelength corresponds to the first selected symbol. Additionally, the method includes modulating the first wavelength with the input optical packet stream.

This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/735,842 filed on Dec. 11, 2012, and entitled “System and Method for Multi-Wavelength Signaling in a Photonic Packet Switch,” which application is hereby incorporated herein by reference.

TECHNICAL FIELD

The present invention relates to a system and method for optical communications, and, in particular, to a system and method for multi-wavelength encoding.

BACKGROUND

Data centers route massive quantities of data. Currently, data centers may have a throughput of about 5-7 terabytes per second, which is expected to drastically increase in the future. Electrical packet switches are used to route data packets in these data centers. Electrical packet switches switch or route packets based on a packet header with inter-stage buffering. The buffering can overflow, causing packet loss and the need for packet retransmission.

Racks of servers, storage, and input-output functions may contain top of rack (TOR) packet switches which combine packet streams from their associated servers and/or other peripherals into a lesser number of very high speed packet streams per TOR switch. These packet streams are routed to the packet switching core switch resource. Also, TOR switches receive the returning switched streams from that resource and distribute them to servers within their rack. There may be 4×40 Gb/s streams from each TOR switch to the core switching resource, and the same number of return streams. There may be one TOR switch per rack, hundreds to ten thousands of racks, and hence hundreds to ten thousands of TOR switches in a data center.

There has been a massive growth in data center capabilities, leading to massive electronic packet switching structures, which are becoming more complex, difficult and expensive to implement. There is a desire for alternative to this approach, such as photonic packet switching.

SUMMARY

An embodiment method for multi-wavelength encoding includes receiving an input packet stream having an address and data and encoding the address of the input packet stream producing an encoded address including a first group of symbols including a first selected symbol, where the first group of symbols has more than two symbols. The method also includes generating a first wavelength in accordance with the first selected symbol and generating an output optical packet stream having the data of the input optical packet and the first wavelength, where the first wavelength corresponds to the first selected symbol. Additionally, the method includes modulating the first wavelength with the input optical packet stream.

An embodiment method for decoding multi-wavelength addresses includes splitting an input optical packet stream having a plurality of wavelengths to a first optical stream and a second optical stream and separating the first optical stream into a first group of optical streams by wavelength, where the first group of optical streams is more than two optical streams. The method also includes detecting optical power in the first group of optical streams producing a plurality of symbols, where optical power is detected in the first optical stream of the first group of optical streams.

An embodiment system for multi-wavelength encoding addresses of an input packet stream includes a packet stream address reader configured to determine the address of an input optical packet of the input packet stream and a first encoder coupled to the packet stream address reader, where the first encoder is configured to encode the address a first including a first group of symbols including a first selected symbol, and where the first group of symbols has more than two symbols. The system also includes a first plurality of switches coupled to the first group of symbols and a first plurality of wavelength sources coupled to the first plurality of switches. Additionally, the system includes a first optical modulator coupled to the first plurality of switches and the input optical packet, where the first plurality of switches is configured to couple a first wavelength source of the first plurality of wavelength sources to the first optical modulator, and where the first wavelength source corresponds to the first selected symbol.

An embodiment system for multi-wavelength decoding addresses of an input optical packet stream includes a splitter configured to split the input optical packet stream into a first optical stream and a second optical stream and a first optical filter configured to separate by wavelength the first optical packet stream to produce a first group of optical streams including more than two optical streams. The system also includes a first plurality of optical detectors coupled to the first optical filter configured to detect power in the first group of optical streams and detect power in the first optical stream of the first group of optical streams. Additionally, the system includes a switch coupled to the first plurality of optical detectors configured to switch the second optical stream with the first group of optical streams.

The foregoing has outlined rather broadly the features of an embodiment of the present invention in order that the detailed description of the invention that follows may be better understood. Additional features and advantages of embodiments of the invention will be described hereinafter, which form the subject of the claims of the invention. It should be appreciated by those skilled in the art that the conception and specific embodiments disclosed may be readily utilized as a basis for modifying or designing other structures or processes for carrying out the same purposes of the present invention. It should also be realized by those skilled in the art that such equivalent constructions do not depart from the spirit and scope of the invention as set forth in the appended claims.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

For a more complete understanding of the present invention, and the advantages thereof, reference is now made to the following descriptions taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawing, in which:

FIG. 1 illustrates an embodiment system for multi-wavelength encoding and decoding;

FIGS. 2A-B illustrate another embodiment system for multi-wavelength encoding;

FIG. 3 illustrates a table with address space and bit rate per carrier;

FIGS. 4A-B illustrate a table of address field size and the number of candidate wavelengths for m-ary encoding;

FIG. 5 illustrates a table with the number of candidate carriers and the bit rate carriers for m-ary encoding;

FIG. 6 illustrates an additional embodiment system for multi-wavelength encoding;

FIG. 7 illustrates a table with address values for various encoding method;

FIG. 8 illustrates an additional embodiment system for multi-wavelength encoding;

FIG. 9 illustrates an embodiment system for multi-wavelength decoding;

FIG. 10 illustrates an additional embodiment system for multi-wavelength decoding;

FIGS. 11A-C illustrate a table with candidate wavelengths, number of wavelengths used, and address field sizes for selecting n of M wavelengths;

FIG. 12 illustrates an additional embodiment system for multi-wavelength encoding;

FIG. 13 illustrates an additional embodiment system for multi-wavelength decoding;

FIGS. 14A-B illustrate combinations for selecting 4 of 8 wavelengths;

FIGS. 15A-B illustrate a table with the number of candidate wavelengths, number of wavelengths used, and address fields for selecting n/2 from M/2 wavelengths; FIGS. 16A-B illustrate a table with the number of candidate wavelengths, number of wavelengths uses, and address field size for selecting n/k from M/k wavelengths;

FIG. 17 illustrates another embodiment system for multi-wavelength encoding;

FIG. 18 illustrates another embodiment system for multi-wavelength decoding;

FIG. 19 illustrates an embodiment method of multi-wavelength encoding; and

FIG. 20 illustrates an embodiment method of multi-wavelength decoding.

Corresponding numerals and symbols in the different figures generally refer to corresponding parts unless otherwise indicated. The figures are drawn to clearly illustrate the relevant aspects of the embodiments and are not necessarily drawn to scale.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF ILLUSTRATIVE EMBODIMENTS

It should be understood at the outset that although an illustrative implementation of one or more embodiments are provided below, the disclosed systems and/or methods may be implemented using any number of techniques, whether currently known or in existence. The disclosure should in no way be limited to the illustrative implementations, drawings, and techniques illustrated below, including the exemplary designs and implementations illustrated and described herein, but may be modified within the scope of the appended claims along with their full scope of equivalents.

Photonic packet switches are a family of network communication elements that can be used as the core switch in a data center, or used in any other packet switching environment. In a photonic packet switch, packets are switched by photonic devices, without converting them to electrical signals. Packet switches switch streams of packets by switching each packet independently towards its destination.

There are several methods of wavelength-based address coding, and various implementations to achieve those codings. The destination address of each packet is encoded by illuminating a combination of wavelengths at the transmitter, with several schemes. In one example, binary coding is used. To encode a symbol, one of two wavelengths is selected. For example, the first wavelength is selected for a “0,” and the second wavelength is selected for a “1,” or vice versa. The address may be encoded with two wavelengths per symbol.

In another example, an address is encoded as n digits with a base m. One of several wavelengths is selecting. The number of candidate wavelengths is m*n. This leads to the address being expressed in ternary, quaternary or higher level coding of optical carrier wavelength into address. The address space, is 3^(n), 4^(n) or in the general case m^(n). There is an increased address space for a given total number of selected wavelengths, or a reduction in the number of selected wavelengths for any given address space, thereby increasing the bit-rate per optical carrier. This scheme may increase or decrease the number of candidate wavelengths for a given address space, depending on the exact scenario.

In an additional example, n wavelengths are selected from M candidates, without assigning them to groups. This gives a large address space and/or reduces the number of candidate wavelengths and reduces the number of lit wavelengths. The maximum address space is M!/((M−n)!*n!).

In another example, the address is encoded into k groups of (n/k from M/k wavelengths), which results in [Select n/k from M/k] over 1/k^(th) of the address lines, repeated k times. These examples may be combined.

In one embodiment, the selected wavelengths are used only for address signaling, and do not carry the data payload. In another embodiment, the selected wavelengths are used for address signaling, while some or all of the wavelengths also carry the data payload.

FIG. 1 illustrates packet address multi-wavelength decoder 280. A packet stream to be sent through a photonic switch initially goes to packet address mapper 282. Lookup wavelength module 284 reads the address of the electrical packet. In an example, the packet address is read from a packet header. Alternatively, the packet address is read from a wrapper or generated by a wrapper.

The packet stream data and the packet address information are then passed to lookup wavelength module 284. Lookup wavelength module 284 is a packet address and wavelength value mapper, which sets the wavelengths to encode the packet address for the corresponding packet. The wavelengths are different for each packet, based on its address. In one example, the symbols in the address are mapped to one of two wavelength values, depending on whether that bit is a “0” or a “1.” One of the wavelengths is selected if the bit is a “0” and the other wavelength is selected if the bit is a “1.” Therefore, for a ten bit address, ten separate operations occur, each selecting one of two wavelength values based on the value of the bit. Hence, for a ten bit address, there are twenty wavelengths selected from.

The selected wavelengths are fed, along with the packet, to transmitting module 288. Transmitting module 288 contains a bank of modulators. In an example, the packet is inverse multiplexed, resulting in an inverse multiplexed stream for each selected wavelength. In another example, the packet stream bypasses the inverse multiplexing function, with the full bandwidth stream fed into a single electro-optic modulator, creating an optical copy of the packet for each stream.

The packet stream is then split by optical splitter 290 into two streams. One packet stream is fed to optical filters 294, which may be ring resonators. Optical filters 294 separate the optical carriers according to wavelength. These individual optical carriers are fed to optical receivers 292, which measure the presence or absence of optical power at the filtered frequency. The outputs of optical receiver 292 are fed in pairs to logical gates 296, which provides a “1” for power detected on a first input and no power detected on a second input, or a “0” for no power detected on the first input and power detected on the second input. The pair of wavelengths going into one of logical gates 296 is a pair of wavelengths that encode an address bit.

Delay module 298 delays the other packet stream. Optical switches 301 route this optical packet stream to one of the two output ports based on the output from logical gates 296. The output of the first of optical switches 301 connected to inputs on one of two next stage switches, where the process continues in stages. Optical switches 301 as illustrated are 1:2 switches, but larger switches may be used.

Additional packet address decoders are disclosed by the U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/591,628 entitled “Spectral Encoding of an Optical Label or Destination” filed on Jan. 27, 2012, U.S. patent application docket number 4194-52800 entitled “Optical Switching Device Using Spectral Trigger” filed on ______, and U.S. Provisional patent application docket number 4194-52701 entitled “Spectral Encoding of an Optical Label or Destination,” filed on ______, which applications are hereby incorporated herein by reference.

FIGS. 2A-B illustrate packet address reader 286. Packet address reader 286 shows a four symbol address field, but fewer or many more address symbols may be used. The input packet stream is fed into packet address reader 416, which extracts the input address. The address has n symbols, where n=4 is pictured. The address is extracted as n parallel symbols, with the symbols going to parallel structures 300.

Parallel structures 300 include logical buffer gate 306 in parallel with logical inverter 308. Logical buffer gate 306 and logical inverter 308 drive optical switches 304 based on the symbol value. In an example, optical switches 304 are small on/off optical switches. Optical switches 304 open a connection to one of wavelength optical sources 302. One of a pair of wavelength optical sources 302 is connected to optical modulator 422 based on the symbol value.

In an example, inverse multiplexing is used. There are n optical modulators 422 in parallel. The packet stream is fed to inverse multiplexer 420, which may be a packet edge synchronized inverse multiplexer. Inverse multiplexer 420 converts the packets in the packet stream to packet fragments in n lower speed data streams at a rate of 1/n of the input to the inverse multiplexer for the n output lines, which are fed to n optical modulators 422. These n data streams are fed to the n optical modulators 422 to create n different optical carriers. These n optical carriers in combination contain both the routing information and the wavelength, and the packet data.

In another example, inverse multiplexing is not used. There is one optical modulator 423. The selected optical carriers may be combined optically into a multi-carrier optical signal which is modulated with the packet data at the full data rate in optical modulator 423, which is a broadband optical modulator. Optical modulator 423 modulates the set of optical signals at the original data rate. FIG. 3 illustrates table 360, which shows a relationship between the number of symbols n, the number of wavelengths used 2n the address space, and the bit rate per carrier as a percentage of the input bit rate. The address space has 2^(n) address location for n optical carriers selected from 2n candidate carriers. For example, for 10 optical carriers selected from 20 optical carriers, there are 1024 addresses, and the bit rate per carrier is 10.00% of the input bit rate. For address fields in the thousands, there are a large number of active optical carriers per packet stream and a large number of packet streams, resulting in a very low data rate per data stream. Also, there are large numbers of sources, modulators, and detectors per stream.

In m-ary coding, wavelengths may each be selected from one of more than two candidate wavelengths. Selecting a given number of active wavelengths from more candidate wavelengths increases the address space. For a given required address space, the number of active optical carriers can be reduced, thereby increasing the bit rate per optical carrier. FIGS. 4A-B illustrate table 340, which shows the relationship between the number of wavelengths selected, the base used, the address field size, and the number of candidate optical wavelengths for m-ary coding. For a coding stream using base m, where m equals 2 in the previous example, for n parallel optical wavelengths, the address space is m^(n), and the number of candidate optical carriers is m*n. For the case of m=2 and n=10, there is an address space of 2^(n)=1024 addresses using 2n=20 candidate optical carriers. However, by inserting a binary to m-ary coder and decoder into the addressing path before modulation and after reception, respectively, the relationship between address field size and the number of wavelengths is changed, such that, for m=3 and n=10, the address space increases to 3¹⁰=59,049, and the number of optical carriers increases to 3n=30 candidate optical carriers. For m=4, n=10, the address space further increases to 4¹⁰=1,048,576, while the number of candidate optical carriers increases to 4n=40 optical carriers. Thus, increasing m while holding n constant increases the address space. In addition, increasing m reduces n while maintaining at least the same number of addresses. For example, m=3 and n=7 gives 2187 addresses, using 21 candidate wavelengths, and n is reduced by 30%. For m=4 and n=5 there are 1024 addresses, while the number of active optical carriers is halved. With a base-8 (octal) coding level, just 3 active wavelengths can support up to 4,096 addresses, while 10 wavelengths support an address field of over 1 billion addresses with 80 candidate wavelengths. 80 candidate wavelengths is within the upper bound of the number of optical carriers that are viable, and corresponds to a standard dense wavelength division multiplexing (DWDM) with an optical carrier spacing of 50 GHz. Due to the availability of binary logic coding, bases 4 and 8 may be convenient to implement.

As an example, for an address field of 5,000 the values of m, n shown in FIG. 5 would suffice. FIG. 5 illustrates table 320 showing the lowest number of required active wavelengths for various forms of base m ranging from 2 (no coding), and 3, to 8 (with transcoding to a different numeric base), with the base ranging from 2 to 20. Binary coding requires 13 active wavelengths to achieve an address field of at least 5,000 (13 wavelengths of m=2→8,192, but 12 wavelengths would have given 4,096 which is under 5,000). However examining an example where transcoding to another numeric base has been applied, octal coding (base 8) has an address field 32,768, well in excess of 5,000, with just 5 active optical carriers. The use of 4 optical carriers with octal coding would have achieved only 4,096 addresses, which is close to but short of the example goal of 5,000. At a base of 20, the gain is even more significant, with the address field being achieved with just 3 active optical carriers, which provides an address space of 8,000, well in excess of the required example 5,000. However, as is shown in FIG. 5, as m increases for a given address space (in this case at least 5,000) besides the decrease in the number of illuminated wavelengths, there is an increase in the number of candidate wavelengths. In fact, this is not a problem, since the number of candidate wavelengths can be made arbitrarily large by the choice of wavelength spacing with current commercially available DWDM transmission operating with a 50 GHz optical grid providing at least 80-100 candidate optical carriers in one waveband. Also, tunable devices and optical filters/multiplexers are readily available to operate at this channel spacing. Additionally, tighter wavelength grids down to 12.5 GHz have been shown to be implementable, which would yield up to 320 optical candidate wavelengths in a single optical band. As m increases due to the application of transcoding, the number of active wavelengths falls, and hence the bit rate per wavelength increases. In FIG. 5, this is illustrated by a baseline (no transcoder) bit rate reduction to 1/13^(th) of the original bit rate (0.077×original bit rate). However, with a coding base of 20, the bit rate is 33% of the original bit rate, or 429% of the performance of the prior base system.

FIG. 6 illustrates multi-wavelength modulator 410, which may be used to generate an optical packet stream on one or more wavelength carriers, each selected from m optical carriers, where m>2 (i.e. binary/m-ary transcoding has been applied). The wavelengths of the carriers carry the routing address in an m-ary coding scheme, where m is an integer. The input packet stream is fed to packet address reader 416. There may be inverse multiplexing. When inverse multiplexing is used, the packet stream is fed to inverse multiplexer 420, a packet edge-synchronous inverse multiplexer, which spreads the packet stream over n optical carriers having a data rate of 1/n. Then, the n outputs of inverse multiplexer 420 are fed to n optical modulators 422. In an example without inverse multiplexing, the optical carriers are modulated with the same full bandwidth data by optical modulator 423. The use of inverse multiplexing lowers the bit rate per carrier, which improves the optical link budget across the switch, and makes individual use of each optical carrier to carry a different part of the data stream. On the other hand, not using inverse multiplexing is simpler, but leads to replicated optical data streams which will occupy more bandwidth, and which may compromise the optical channel spacing, since the optical sidebands of one stream should not overlap the optical carrier wavelength of an adjacent channel.

With or without inverse multiplexing, the entire optical packet stream bandwidth is carried on one fiber and fed through one switch as a multi-wavelength signal. The output is amplified by optical amplifier 424. The far end optical conversion, not pictured, involves optically demultiplexing the carriers and sending the carriers into separate optical receivers. With inverse multiplexing, an array of n receivers may feed an inverse-inverse multiplexer to reinstate the original packet stream. Without inverse multiplexing, the receivers generate a version of the entire packet stream at full bandwidth. If the link budget across the switch is marginal for the high speed signal, each of the replicated copies may have a high error rate. The high error rate may be drastically reduced by applying combinational techniques, such as majority decision making.

The packet address enters encoder 412, which maps the binary addresses of the packets to another numerical base. FIG. 7 illustrates table 350, which shows examples of binary to m-ary mappings that may be used by encoder 412. There are several groups of outputs from encoder 412, where each group has m lines, and only one line per group is activated at a time. The activated line within each group signifies the value of that group's m-ary symbol. The number of groups is equal to the number of m-ary symbols in the address field.

These active lines activate optical switches 414, which are small fast optical on/off switches, such as integrated Mach-Zehnder switches. These switches have to be fast to set up the optical carrier during the inter-packet gap between the packets of the packet stream, which is about 1 ns for a 100 Gb/s stream or 2.5 ns for a 40 Gb/s stream. Optical switches 414 are coupled to wavelength generators 413. Thus, optical switches 414 couple the selected source, and hence the selected wavelength, encoding one m-ary symbol into an optical carrier. One optical switch and one wavelength generator per group is activated. Therefore, n optical carriers carry the packet data plus packet address information in an address field of m″. For an n symbol m-ary address, the total number of candidate optical carriers is m*n.

The selected wavelengths are then amplified by optical amplifiers 418, for example to offset the loss from optical combiners. With inverse multiplexing, the selected wavelengths are fed to optical modulators 422. The outputs of optical modulators 422 are then combined to produce a multi-carrier optical signal with n optical carriers containing inverse multiplexed packet data at 1/n of the original data rate and an address field of m″. Without inverse multiplexing, the selected wavelengths are fed to optical modulator 423.

By manipulation of m, an arbitrarily large address field may be created by a given value of n. Alternatively, for a given size address field, the bit rate reduction per optical carrier may be varied by the choice of m and n.

An embodiment of the m-ary coding approach and its implementation is for the case of m=2^(k) where k is an integer. FIG. 8 illustrates multi-wavelength modulator 430, which is similar to multi-wavelength modulator 410. Wavelength modulator 430 requires m=2^(k), where k is an integer greater than 1. For example, wavelength modulator 430 may be used for quaternary, octal, or hexadecimal coding. Binary to 2^(k)-ary coding may be performed by encoders 432. Encoders 432 may be implemented by parallel smaller simpler coders than encoder 412, because the mapping of specific groups of binary symbols into each 2^(k)-ary symbol is independent of the values of other 2^(k)-ary symbols.

The outputs of encoders 432 are fed to optical switches 414. The output of an encoder is fed to a group of optical switches. Optical switches 414 select one wavelength generator 413 to be connected in each group. The output may be amplified by optical amplifier 418, and then fed to optical modulators 422 or optical modulator 423.

As in multi-wavelength modulator 410, the input packet stream is fed to packet address reader 416, which packet addresses to encoders 432. When inverse multiplexing is used, the packet stream is fed to inverse multiplexer 420, and the outputs are fed to optical modulators 423. However, when inverse multiplexing is not used, the packet stream is fed to optical modulator 422. The output of optical modulator 423 or optical modulators 422 are fed to optical amplifier 424.

The output of multi-wavelength modulator 410 or multi-wavelength modulator 430 is fed to photonic switching fabric 112, where it undergoes packet level photonic switching. The routing through photonic switching fabric 112 is determined by the packet address carried by the selected wavelengths.

The multi-wavelength encoded address may be decoded by a decoder, for example multi-wavelength decoder 480, illustrated in FIG. 9. The incoming optical power is split. Some optical power is sent to filters 482. Then, filters 482 filter out one of the candidate wavelengths. In an example, filters 482 may be optical ring resonator tuned filters. In another example, filters 482 are arrayed waveguide grating (AWG) wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) multiplexers. The filtered wavelengths are sent to optical receivers 484, which detect optical power at the filtered wavelengths. Thus, the address is recovered.

Gates 486 receive a strobe line and word line to determining if a valid address is present. The decoded binary symbols are fed to the multi-stage switch, and set up the crosspoints to enable the connection through the switch. To turn a 1×2^(n) score switch into a 2^(n)×2^(n) multiport switch additional decoded signaling routing from multiple input ports is needed.

The balance of the optical power from the splitter is passed to optical delay 488, a short optical delay. Optical delay 488 allows time for address decoding. In an example, the delay is tens of nanoseconds. The delayed packets are passed to optical switches 490. As pictured, optical switches 490 are 1×2 switch stages. Alternatively, more complex switches, such as 1×16 optical switches 492 may be used.

Optical receivers 484 pass the address words to decoder 485. For a chain of 1×2 switching stages, as pictured, decoder 485 is an m-ary to binary decoder. The first switching stage is driven by the most significant bit of the binary address, while the last stage is driven by the least significant bit. Alternatively, decoder 485 decodes to another form. As an example, the decoder could provide a quaternary output or a paired binary bits output for use with a 1:4 switching stage. In an embodiment, where the switch stage sizing matches the coding base, for example when the coding base is 6 and 1×6 switches are used, the switch stage may be driven directly from the optical receivers without decoder 485. Decoder 485 may be implemented by a dedicated logic function. Alternatively, decoder 485 may be created by the use of a read-only memory (ROM) which is encoded to act as a lookup table.

FIG. 10 illustrates multi-wavelength decoder 500, which is similar to multi-wavelength decoder 480. Multi-wavelength decoder 500 is used when m=2^(k), where k is an integer greater than 1. In an example, multi-wavelength decoder 500 is used to decode an address that was encoded using encoder 432. As in multi-wavelength decoder 480, the input optical power is spit, with a portion going to filters 482, then to optical receivers 484. The output of optical receivers 484 is sent to decoders 502. Decoders 502 are 2^(k)-ary to binary decoders. Also, decoders 502 may optionally contain a binary to switch driver decoder. The output of decoders 502 are checked with gates 486 using strobe lines to determine the validity of the address.

The remaining portion of the optical power is fed to optical delay 488, then to optical switches 490 or optical switches 492. Optical switches 490 or optical switches 492 switch the data signal from optical delay 488 using the addresses from decoder 502.

In another example, instead of selecting n of m candidate wavelengths in a group, more than one wavelength may be selected from a field of M candidate wavelengths. For M candidate wavelengths, there are M ways to select the first wavelength, M−1 ways to select the second wavelength, and (M−(n−1)) ways to select the nth wavelength. When the order of selecting is not important, there are M!/n! combinations. When the order of selection is not important, as in selecting wavelengths, the number of combinations is given by:

$\frac{M!}{{n!}{\left( {M - n} \right)!}}.$

For n=10 and M=20, the number of addresses in the address field is 184,756. Further, for 20 candidate wavelengths and using n=3, there are 1,140 addresses in the address field. Hence, a slightly larger address field than the original solution provided may be created with only three active carrier wavelengths instead of 10.

FIGS. 11A-C illustrate table 330, showing the address field size for the number of candidate wavelengths and the number of wavelengths selected. Very large address spaces are achievable with low numbers of selected wavelengths for 20 or more candidate wavelengths. For 40 candidate wavelengths, nearly 100,000 addresses are available for n=4. A large data center may be fabricated with as few as three or four selected wavelengths, resulting in the inverse multiplexing of 100 Gb/s signals down to 33.33 Gb/s or 25 Gb/s per wavelength. In this context, some instantiations of 100 Gb/s data streams use 4×25 Gb/s sub-streams, so these could be applied to the appropriate wavelength optical carriers, with the advantages of inverse multiplexing (each stream carrying separate components of information without replication) without further inverse multiplexing. A connectivity signaling scheme using 4 wavelengths selected from 20 wavelengths would have an address field size of 4,845 addresses, while a signaling scheme using 4 wavelengths from 40 would have an address field size of 91,390 addresses (likely to be larger than the largest existing or planned data center's complement of TOR's. However, a connectivity scheme using 4 wavelengths selected from 60 wavelengths would have an address field size of 487,635 addresses. The use of 40 candidate wavelengths or more can create enough addresses for the planetary internet. For example, 10 active wavelengths selected from 60 candidate wavelengths gives an address field size of 75.3 billion addresses.

FIG. 12 illustrates multi-wavelength encoder 440 for selecting n from M candidate wavelengths. In multi-wavelength encoder 440, an optically formatted multicarrier packet stream is generated, where each selected wavelength has a replica of the entire data stream. The packet stream to be optically switched enters and goes to packet address reader 416. The packet address is then sent to encoder 441, a binary to n of M encoder. Encoder 441 encodes the incoming binary address into a format where exactly n optical carrier wavelengths are selected from a candidate field of M wavelengths. Encoder 441 may be logic based. Alternatively, encoder 441 may use a look up table, for example stored in ROM.

Encoder 441 activates a specific n of its M output lines, causing a corresponding n of M associated optical switches 414 to be activated. Optical switches 414 then connect a specific n of M wavelength generators 413 optical combiner 442. For example, optical combiner 442 is a wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) multiplexer. The address then passes through optical amplifier 418 to offset the loss on the optical combiner, then to optical modulator 422. The composite group of n optical carriers transmits the packet address information, encoded by the selection of the wavelengths of each of its n constituent carriers. Optical modulator 422 modulates the packet stream from packet address reader 416 and the selected n wavelengths. A multi-carrier optical signal carrying the packet data and the packet routing is output from multi-wavelength encoder 440. While FIG. 12 does not show inverse multiplexing, n-way inverse multiplexing similar to that of FIG. 8 could be added.

FIG. 13 illustrates multi-wavelength decoder 510 for extraction and processing of the optical wavelength based addresses of the packet stream at the packet switch for n selected wavelengths from M candidate wavelengths. Multi-wavelength decoder 510 may be used to decode an address that was encoded using encoder 441. Multi-wavelength decoder 510 is similar to multi-wavelength decoder 480. The address field at the input of multi-wavelength decoder 510 is not treated as m-ary symbols, but as a specific form of code operating across all wavelengths to provide a selection of n values from M possibilities.

The input optical signal is split, with a portion of the power going to filters 482, which may be optical ring resonator tuned filters, as pictured. Alternatively, filters 482 may be an AWG WDM demultiplexer. The filtered wavelengths go to optical receivers 484, which determine whether optical power is present at the filtered wavelengths, and then to decoder 512. Decoder 512 is an n from M to binary decoder. Optionally, decoder 512 also includes a binary to switch driver decoder. The outputs wavelengths are tested by gates 486 and strobe lines to determine if a valid address is present.

The other portion of the input optical packet is sent through optical delay 488 to optical switches 490 or optical switches 492, where it is switched with the address from decoder 512.

FIGS. 14A-B illustrate chart 514, which shows an instantiation of n from M coding. In this case, n=4, M=8. Hence, the table shows the combinations for selecting any 4 wavelengths of 8 wavelength candidates. The number of unique combinations is 70 given by M!/(n!*(M−n)!)=8!/(4!*4!).

The n from M code, where there are always n active carriers generated from a field of M, can be generated by a look up table, or logically or by a combination of a look up table and logic. However for large values of n, the encoding may be complex. The complexity may be reduced by dividing the candidate wavelengths into two groups of n/2. In each group, n/2 wavelengths are selected from M/2 candidate wavelengths. However this does somewhat reduce the address space. With n=10 and M=40, there are 848 million addresses. By treating the 10 selected wavelengths as two groups of 5 wavelengths selected out of 20 candidate wavelengths per group and using two 5 out of 20 encoders and decoders, about 240 million addresses are achieved. Alternatively, for selecting 4 wavelengths out of 40 candidate wavelengths, there are 91,360 address locations. By sub-dividing that into two 2 out of 20 encoders and decoders, there are still 36,100 address locations available.

FIGS. 15A-B illustrate table 190 showing the relationship between the number of candidate wavelengths, the number of selected wavelengths, and the address field size for selecting n/2 from M/2 addresses and from combining two n/2 from M/2 multi-wavelength encoders. This combination requires two n/2 from M/2 decoders instead of one n from M decoder. This coding is not as efficient as the single selecting n wavelengths from M candidate wavelengths method, but it enables the use of simpler coders and decoders. Using two 2 from 30 encoders and decoders, instead of one 4 from 60 encoder and decoder the look up tables used have 870 entries, not around 488,000 entries. This results in an address field size of 189,225, reduced from 487,635. For the example of n=10, M=40 using two 5 from 20 coders instead of one 10 from 40 coder results in two look up tables of 15,504 entries each, each as opposed to a single look up table of 848 million entries.

In another example, more than two sub-blocks may be combined. More generally, encoding may be for sets of n/k from M/k encoders and decoders. FIGS. 16A-B illustrates table 200 showing the number of candidate wavelengths, the number of wavelengths selected, and the address field size for 2, 3, and 4 sets of n/k from M/k encoders and decoders. FIG. 17 illustrates multi-wavelength encoder 310 with nested encoders. Initially, the packet stream is received, and packet address reader 416 reads the packet address. The packet address is sent to encoder 312 and encoder 314. Encoder 312 and encoder 314 are binary n/2 from M/2 encoders, which may be implemented by a look up table or by logic. Two encoders are pictured, but more encoders may be used. For example, there may be k n/k from M/k encoders. The encoders may have the same values for n and M, or they may have different values.

The addresses are fed to optical switches 414, which are coupled to wavelength generators 413. Optical switches 414 connect the selected wavelength generators to optical combiner 442, which may be a WDM multiplexer. These addresses are modulated with the input packet stream from packet address reader 416 in optical modulator 422, creating an optical packet stream that contains the data and the address.

FIG. 18 illustrates multi-wavelength decoder 250, for selecting n/k from M/k wavelengths k times. Initially, splitter 252 splits the input optical data stream. A portion of the optical power goes to filter 254, which may be an AWG WDM demultiplexer. Alternatively, optical ring resonators may be used as filter 254. The outputs from filter 254 go to optical receivers 484, which detect the optical power at the filtered wavelengths. The outputs of optical receivers 484 go to decoder 256 and decoder 258. Two decoders are pictured, but more decoders, or nested decoders, may be used. The decoders may each be the same decoders, as pictured. Alternatively, the decoders may be different. For example, there may be k n/k of M/k decoders. The outputs of decoder 256 and decoder 258 go to switch 260, possibly being checked in module 264 against a strobe to determine validity.

The other portion of the optical power goes to optical delay 488, then to switch 260. Switch 260 may be a single switch, or a sequence of switches. Switch 260 modulates the selected wavelengths with the data.

FIG. 19 illustrates flowchart 520 for a method of multi-wavelength encoding an optical address in an optical data stream. Initially, in step 522, the data packet address is read. This may be determined by a header, by a wrapper, or may be generated by a wrapper.

Then, optionally, in step 524, the input photonic packet is inverse multiplexed. For example, if an address is encoded with n symbols, n inverse multiplexed streams, each with a data rate of 1/n, are produced by inverse multiplexing.

Meanwhile, in step 528, the address is encoded. In one example, the address is encoded using m-ary coding, where 1 of m wavelengths are selected for each of n groups. Alternatively, any n wavelengths of M candidate wavelengths are selected. In another example, k sets of n/k wavelengths of M/k candidate wavelengths are selected. An encoder converts a binary form of the address to the desired form. The encoded address then couples the appropriate wavelength generator to one or more optical modulator. The wavelength coding is generating. For example, this may be performed by connecting wavelength optical sources using optical switches based on the coding. A selection of m of n wavelength optical sources may be selected. Alternatively, n of M wavelength optical sources may be connected.

Finally, the optical stream containing the optical data modulates the generated wavelengths in step 532. The output may be amplified. The output signal contains the data and the address encoded in the wavelengths.

FIG. 20 illustrates flowchart 540 for multi-wavelength decoding. For example, the method shown in flowchart 540 may be used to decode multi-wavelength addresses that were encoded using the method shown by flowchart 520. Initially, in step 542, an input photonic packet is split. The main portion of the wavelength goes to step 544, where it is optically delayed, for example by tens of nanoseconds. The delay provides for time for the address to be decoded.

The other portion of the optical signal is filtered in step 546 by a series of filters, where there is one filter for each wavelength. The filtering may be performed by optical ring resonator tuned filters or an AWG WDM demultiplexer. Then, in step 548, the output optical energy filtered by the wavelengths is detected to determine if there is optical power for each wavelength.

Next, in step 550, the detected optical energy may be optionally decoded. Finally, in step 552, the optical data is switched with the optical addresses, producing the decoded signal.

While several embodiments have been provided in the present disclosure, it should be understood that the disclosed systems and methods might be embodied in many other specific forms without departing from the spirit or scope of the present disclosure. The present examples are to be considered as illustrative and not restrictive, and the intention is not to be limited to the details given herein. For example, the various elements or components may be combined or integrated in another system or certain features may be omitted, or not implemented.

In addition, techniques, systems, subsystems, and methods described and illustrated in the various embodiments as discrete or separate may be combined or integrated with other systems, modules, techniques, or methods without departing from the scope of the present disclosure. Other items shown or discussed as coupled or directly coupled or communicating with each other may be indirectly coupled or communicating through some interface, device, or intermediate component whether electrically, mechanically, or otherwise. Other examples of changes, substitutions, and alterations are ascertainable by one skilled in the art and could be made without departing from the spirit and scope disclosed herein. 

What is claimed is:
 1. A method for multi-wavelength encoding, the method comprising: receiving an input packet stream having an address and data; encoding the address of the input packet stream producing an encoded address comprising a first group of symbols including a first selected symbol, wherein the first group of symbols has more than two symbols; generating a first wavelength in accordance with the first selected symbol; generating an output optical packet stream having the data of the input packet and the first wavelength, wherein the first wavelength corresponds to the first selected symbol; and modulating the first wavelength with the input packet stream.
 2. The method of claim 1, wherein the encoded address comprises n groups of symbols including n selected symbols, wherein the method further comprises: generating n wavelengths corresponding to the n selected symbols comprising generating a first optical stream; and modulating the n generated wavelengths with the input packet stream.
 3. The method of claim 2, further comprising inverse multiplexing the input packet stream.
 4. The method of claim 1, wherein the first group of symbols includes a second selected symbol, and wherein the method further comprises: generating a second wavelength corresponding to the second selected symbol; and modulating the second wavelength with the input packet stream.
 5. The method of claim 4, wherein the encoded address further comprises a second group of symbols including n selected symbols, and wherein the method further comprises: generating n wavelengths corresponding to the n selected symbols; and modulating the n wavelengths with the input packet stream.
 6. The method of claim 4, wherein the first group of symbols includes n selected symbols selected from M symbols, wherein M is an integer and n is an integer less than M, and wherein the method further comprises: generating n wavelengths corresponding to the n selected symbols comprising generating the first wavelength in accordance with the first selected symbol, and generating the second wavelength corresponding to the second selected symbol; and modulating the n wavelengths with the input packet stream comprising modulating the first wavelength with the input packet stream, and modulating the second wavelength with the input packet stream.
 7. The method of claim 1, wherein the first group of symbols has 2^(k) symbols, wherein k is an integer greater than
 1. 8. A method for decoding multi-wavelength addresses, the method comprising: splitting an input optical packet stream having a plurality of wavelengths to a first optical stream and a second optical stream; separating the first optical stream into a first group of optical streams by wavelength, wherein the first group of optical streams is more than two optical streams; and detecting whether optical power in the first group of optical streams is above a threshold, producing a plurality of symbols, wherein optical power is detected in the first optical stream of the first group of optical streams.
 9. The method of claim 8, further comprising decoding the detected optical power.
 10. The method of claim 8, further comprising separating the input optical packet stream into a second group of optical streams by wavelength, wherein the second group of optical streams has the same number of optical streams as the first group of optical streams.
 11. The method of claim 8, wherein the first group of optical streams has 2^(k) optical streams, and wherein k is an integer greater than
 1. 12. The method of claim 8, wherein optical power is detected in the second optical stream of the first group of optical streams.
 13. The method of claim 8, further comprising switching the second optical stream with the plurality of symbols.
 14. A system for multi-wavelength encoding addresses of an input packet stream, the system comprising: a packet stream address reader configured to determine the address of an input optical packet of the input packet stream; a first encoder coupled to the packet stream address reader, wherein the first encoder is configured to encode the address to produce a first encoded address comprising a first group of symbols including a first selected symbol, and wherein the first group of symbols has more than two symbols; a first plurality of switches coupled to the first group of symbols; a first plurality of wavelength sources coupled to the first plurality of switches; and a first optical modulator coupled to the first plurality of switches and the input optical packet, wherein the first plurality of switches is configured to couple a first wavelength source of the first plurality of wavelength sources to the first optical modulator, and wherein the first wavelength source corresponds to the first selected symbol.
 15. The system of claim 14, wherein the first plurality of switches is configured to couple a second wavelength source of the first plurality of wavelength sources to the first optical modulator.
 16. The system of claim 14, further comprising: a second encoder coupled to the packet stream address reader, wherein the second encoder is configured to encode the address to produce a second encoded address comprising a second group of symbols having the same number of symbols as the first group of symbols; a second plurality of switches coupled to the second group of symbols; and a second plurality of wavelength sources coupled to the second plurality of switches.
 17. The system of claim 14, wherein the first encoded address further comprises a second group of symbols including a second selected symbol, wherein the first group has the same number of symbols as the second group of symbols, and wherein the system further comprises: a second plurality of switches coupled to the second group of symbols; and a second plurality of wavelength sources coupled to the second plurality of switches.
 18. The system of claim 17, further comprising: an inverse multiplexer coupled to the packet stream address reader and the first optical modulator; and a second optical modulator coupled to the inverse multiplexer and the second plurality of switches, wherein the second plurality of switches is configured to couple the second plurality of wavelength sources to the second optical modulator, and wherein the second wavelength source corresponds to the second selected symbol.
 19. A system for multi-wavelength decoding packet routing addresses of an input optical packet stream, the system comprising: a splitter configured to split the input optical packet stream into a first optical stream and a second optical stream; a first optical filter configured to separate by wavelength the first optical packet stream to produce a first group of optical streams comprising more than two optical streams; a first plurality of optical detectors coupled to the first optical filter configured to detect power in the first group of optical streams and detect power in the first optical stream of the first group of optical streams; and a switch coupled to the first plurality of optical detectors configured to switch the second optical stream with the first group of optical streams.
 20. The system of claim 19, further comprising a decoder coupled between the first plurality of optical detectors and the switch.
 21. The system of claim 19, further comprising: a second optical filter configured to separate by wavelength the first optical stream to produce a second group of optical streams, wherein the second group of optical streams has the same number of streams as the first group of optical streams; and a second plurality of optical detectors coupled to the second optical filter configured to detect power in the second group of optical streams.
 22. The system of claim 21, further comprising: a first decoder coupled between the first plurality of optical detectors and the switch; and a second decoder coupled to the second plurality of optical detectors.
 23. The system of claim 19, wherein the first plurality of optical detectors is further configured to detect power in the second optical stream of the first group of optical streams. 